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Mount Prospect, Illinois 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Mount Prospect IL
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Mount Prospect IL
Issued by: National Weather Service Chicago, IL |
| Updated: 11:05 am CDT Apr 21, 2026 |
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This Afternoon
 Scattered T-storms and Breezy
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Tonight
 Partly Cloudy then Patchy Fog
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Wednesday
 Patchy Fog then Sunny
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Wednesday Night
 Partly Cloudy
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Thursday
 Mostly Sunny
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Thursday Night
 Slight Chance T-storms then Chance Showers
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Friday
 Showers Likely
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Friday Night
 Partly Cloudy
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Saturday
 Mostly Sunny
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| Hi 75 °F |
Lo 52 °F |
Hi 71 °F |
Lo 54 °F |
Hi 80 °F |
Lo 61 °F |
Hi 74 °F |
Lo 48 °F |
Hi 63 °F |
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Hazardous Weather Outlook
This Afternoon
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Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mainly between 2pm and 5pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 75. Breezy, with a southwest wind 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. |
Tonight
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Patchy fog after 4am. Otherwise, partly cloudy, with a low around 52. West southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming north after midnight. |
Wednesday
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Patchy fog before 7am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 71. East wind around 5 mph, with gusts as high as 10 mph. |
Wednesday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 54. East wind around 5 mph becoming south after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 10 mph. |
Thursday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 80. South wind 5 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. |
Thursday Night
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A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of precipitation is 40%. |
Friday
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Showers likely, with thunderstorms also possible after 1pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 74. Chance of precipitation is 60%. |
Friday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 48. |
Saturday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 63. |
Saturday Night
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Mostly cloudy, with a low around 45. |
Sunday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 64. |
Sunday Night
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A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 49. |
Monday
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A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Mount Prospect IL.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
922
FXUS63 KLOT 211742
AFDLOT
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL
1242 PM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Threat for scattered thunderstorms this afternoon and evening.
Severe threat is low, but a few strong/gusty cores possible,
particularly south of I-80 and east of I-55.
- Warming trend through Thursday (except cooler near Lake
Michigan on Wednesday).
- More widespread showers and thunderstorms with another cold
front Thursday night into Friday.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 218 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Water vapor loops reveal a low-amplitude shortwave embedded
within broad northwest flow, shifting steadily eastward into
northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota early this morning. Ahead
of this feature, a southwesterly LLJ is near its nocturnal
peak, but will remain robust as it drifts across parts of the
region later this morning. Expectation is for surface gusts to
increase quickly after sunrise as mixing into the base of this
arriving speed max begins. Based on the progression and
orientation of the strongest flow, there will likely be a
notable north- south wind gust gradient across the area today,
with the strongest occurring roughly east of I-55 and south of
I-80. Given fairly deep mixing (at least to 850-800 mb), have
boosted wind gusts towards the NBM 90th percentile (35+ mph),
which aligns better with mean boundary layer flow near 30 knots
during the afternoon. In addition, have dropped dewpoints across
the southeast third of the forecast area, in-line with the
deeper-mixing guidance as dewpoints mixed out pretty
aggressively yesterday. With the overlap of stronger winds and
afternoon RH values near 30 percent, parts of the area may
approach an elevated grass fire danger as fine fuels have dried
(Midewin RAWS site at 7% yesterday afternoon), and this part of
the forecast area hasn`t received nearly as much rain as farther
north. Will highlight this in the fire weather planning
forecast.
The other focus today is on what appears to be an increasing
potential for thunderstorms this afternoon and into the evening.
The aforementioned shortwave will transport a renewed elevated
mixed layer into the area later this morning and afternoon. The
upper air sounding at North Platte, NE sampled the core of this
EML plume as it advected off the high terrain, with surface-5 km
lapse rates near dry adiabatic. As this plume of steep lapse
rates arrives in our northwest through the morning, forecast
guidance nearly ubiquitously shows increasing saturation taking
place at the top of the EML near 600-500 mb along with the
eventual initiation of very high-based convection rooted above
6-7 kft. Convection initially may remain fairly sparse, but it`s
now looking like at least widely scattered coverage is in the
cards across parts of northeast Illinois and into northwest
Indiana during the afternoon hours.
As this activity continues southeastward, there may be a
potential for some stronger wind gusts as cores work into an
area of deeper mixing. Overall, instability will not be that
significant (likely a few hundred J/kg), but the dry sub-cloud
layer may promote some strong gusts to the surface, particularly
south of I-80 and east of about I-55. If cores manage to
sustain and grow (which also is not entirely clear at this
point), couldn`t rule out the potential for a few 60+ mph gusts
and perhaps some small hail. Additional convection may develop
this evening as a southwesterly LLJ impinges upon some increased
925-850 mb moisture and overtops a remnant outflow boundary.
The orientation of the mid and upper level wind field (strong
veering to the northwest with near-surface southerlies) can
result in localized training issues. So while the multi-model
CAM suite really doesn`t show a strong signal for this now, will
need to keep an eye on this in the vicinity of the IN/IL state
line this evening.
A backdoor front/boundary will push into the region through late
tonight. This will turn winds onshore at the lakefront tonight.
Can`t rule out that areas of fog bleed in off the lake late
tonight into Wednesday morning, but neutral to mixy modified
Richardson number values increase uncertainty as to how far
inland this threat will extend. For now, have confined fog
wording to the first mile or two of the lakefront.
Onshore flow will persist through the day on Wednesday, and the
combination of stratus and fog over the lake will likely hold
high temperatures in the mid 50s lakeside while inland locales
will warm into the 70s. This boundary looks like it`ll stall
somewhere in our southwest through the day, and with dewpoints
forecast to rise to near 60 to its south, additional
thunderstorm development will be possible through midday and
afternoon hours Wednesday. Forcing appears very nebulous, and
likely limited to general near-surface convergence, so made no
alterations to the NBM-delivered slight chances in our far
southeast at this time.
Warmer and breezy conditions will develop on Thursday, with
lingering lake cooling likely confined to portions of Lake
County (IL) and perhaps far northeastern Cook. The next
synoptic trough will roll overhead through Thursday night
delivering another round of more widespread showers and some
thunderstorms into Friday morning. Limited instability, the
climatologically unfavorable time of night, and overall weak
flow suggests the severe threat should remain pretty low with
this activity.
A cold front will send temperatures back to near-normal levels
over the weekend. Another system will bring the next chances
for showers and storms back to the area early next week.
Carlaw
&&
.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z THURSDAY/...
Issued at 1242 PM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Aviation forecast concerns for the 18Z TAFs:
- Brief thunderstorm threat for the Chicago metro terminals this
afternoon. TSRA may be accompanied by small hail and brief
higher wind gusts.
- Wind shift to the NE predawn Wednesday with a cold front.
- Signal remains for dense fog/low stratus (IFR/LIFR) for
Chicago sites (ORD/MDW/GYY) just inland of the lake behind a
cold front Wednesday morning. Low confidence in impacts and
duration.
Midday surface analysis depicts a weak surface low over west
central WI, along a cold front which stretches southwest across
IA and into southeast NE. Southeast of this front, the terminals
reside within a breezy southwest flow regime with relatively
modest humidity. While this warm sector air mass is generally
capped with respect to surface-based convective development,
increasing mid-level moisture beneath a region of steep lapse
rates aloft has allowed for scattered TSRA development along a
southwest-northeast line mainly across southern WI. Have noted
some mid-level cloud development farther southwest into north
central IL, though so far convective development appears to be
less robust than north of the IL/WI state line. CAM guidance has
not been great with these trends (storms developed farther north
than forecast), apparently struggling with placement of the
mid-level moisture axis. With some TSRA threat lingering, have
maintained the inherited TEMPO groups for the Chicago terminals,
though have shortened them up a bit and shifted them a little
earlier based on extrapolation of upstream convection/mid-level
cloud deck. If storms do track over an individual TAF site,
can`t rule out brief stronger wind gusts and even some small
hail.
Things quiet down quickly behind this activity late this
afternoon and evening. The cold front is expected to sag into
the area after midnight tonight, with a wind shift to the
northeast expected pre-dawn. High-res guidance (repeated runs of
RAP/HRRR) continues to indicate the potential for low
stratus/fog to spread into the Chicago terminals closest to the
lake behind this wind shift. Confidence is not terribly high
with this spreading very far inland, though have maintained an
MVFR/TEMPO IFR period for ORD/MDW/GYY Wednesday morning. If this
does end up impacting these terminals, would think some
improvement would occur by mid-late morning with lack of cloud
cover above and high sun angle. Northeast winds would then
persist through the day.
Ratzer
&&
.LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...Small Craft Advisory until 4 PM CDT this afternoon for
Wilmette Harbor to Calumet Harbor IL.
Small Craft Advisory until 7 PM CDT this evening for the IN
nearshore waters.
&&
$$
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